By Marcelle Meyer
As most students know, Fordham University has recently switched food providers for on-campus dining from Sodexo to Aramark. What many students do not realize is that Aramark, which provides dining services to many prisons and universities, has a history of legal and ethical misconduct. According to the Corporate Research Project, a non-profit organization that researches various companies and organizations, the corporation has paid fines for a number of violation, including underfeeding prisoners, not providing adequate working conditions for employees and serving spoiled food. As a Jesuit university founded upon the values of service and social justice, it seems contradictory to provide funding to a company that has so egregiously violated our standards of ethics.
Fordham focuses its non-academic pursuits on service for others. The Jesuits have a long history of advocating for social justice, and the number of service opportunities and organizations on campus is just one testament to that. Additionally, the Catholic Church is the largest charitable organization in the world and strongly advocates for prisoners’ rights. Religion aside, it is not just the Catholic Church and the Jesuits who believe these malpractices of Aramark are wrong; many people, regardless of religious affiliation, would say that the Aramark’s actions in prisons are unethical.
Fordham has an obligation to uphold its values in all organizations that it contracts. Students are regularly held to a standard of Catholic teachings through university policies. We have housing policies that are used to enforce Catholic rules regarding premarital sex, campus policies that disallow contraception for non-medical reasons and a core program that deeply explores questions of theology and philosophy in order to align with Jesuit approaches to education. If students are expected to uphold these standards, then it is only right that institutions working with Fordham should also represent our values, or at the very least, not directly violate them.
Fordham states on its website that it “hires and recruits with the intention of preserving its Jesuit and Catholic identity and mission.” Yet, by contracting with corporations like Aramark and providing profit to these institutions, Fordham is simultaneously violating its own code of ethics while helping to perpetuate abusive systems that will continue as long as they are able to make a profit.
It is true that one university refusing to work with Aramark will not force them to change their policies, but it is also true that a university’s lax mindset is what allows corporations to continue their unethical actions. As a university that seeks to promote social justice, we must hold ourselves to a higher standard in our hiring practices in order to truly show our commitment to a mission of service to others.
George Ashur • Nov 4, 2016 at 11:04 am
FYI, Georgetown just extended its contract with Aramark for another 10 years.
Sunny • Oct 26, 2016 at 2:13 pm
And how did this author feel about Sodexo while they were on campus? http://tmn.truman.edu/blog/editorial/letter-to-the-editor-truman-cant-ignore-sodexos-unethical-practices/
Paul J. Dougherty • Oct 26, 2016 at 12:42 pm
Among many things needed to get this University up & running, full whole complte … lacking in nothing is IN-HOUSE FOOD SERVICE OPERATION. Engineers Country Club might be, in part, a good example, they have a banquet type of food service (included in club membership fees) simple good food, breakfast, lunch & dinner during the weekand treat food on Friday, Saturday & Sunday (Pork, Roast Beef Lasanga) as well as staple fish, fruit & vegetable good stuff during the week (eggplant, red pepper, green pepper, squash, Zucchinni with tuna salad or chicken Salad & flat bread for nice wrap). Columbia University in the 1950’s had a maid/cook/nurse for each brownstone building that housed football players and they shopped locally for the students that they served. These major food giants are sinking our ship.
John McBride • Oct 26, 2016 at 6:02 am
This is what the Pope thinks of company leadership:
http://catholicphilly.com/2016/10/news/local-news/pope-francis-bestows-honors-on-45-philadelphians/
John McBride • Oct 26, 2016 at 5:57 am
Man are you facts wrong. To malign a good company like ARAMARK because you got warm eggs is repugnant. No facts just innuendo terrible !
Lizzy • Oct 27, 2016 at 4:21 pm
“To malign a good company like ARAMARK because you got warm eggs is repugnant.”
I don’t think the author ever criticized the food (if that’s what you were referring to, but I really didn’t understand what you meant there). Your criticism doesn’t engage with the ethics–why shouldn’t we criticize companies when they violate laws as well as ethical standards?
“No facts just innuendo terrible!”
The fines imposed on Aramark are factually true; this was discussed as well in another article from The Ram in April. So what are the specific facts that you find to be absent, other than the link that you posted, describing someone who works for Aramark receiving papal recognition for work that they did for an organization that is not Aramark?
I agree with the author; Fordham food service has not served it’s students well in my time here, and I would also like to see us put more effort into making better decisions about our food providers.